
Leeds Utd v Crystal Palace
Saturday 20th December@20:00 | Elland Road
Crystal Palace will embark on the nearly 200-mile trek up the A1(M) to Elland Road on Saturday evening, determined to steady the ship amid a punishing pre-Christmas schedule. The Eagles sit proudly in fifth place after amassing 26 points from their opening 16 Premier League fixtures, perched ten points, and a dozen table places ahead of the Whites. Oliver Glasner knows that a run of fixtures bristling with four games in ten days, coupled with a Carabao Cup tie against Arsenal just before Christmas, risks turning Palace’s bright start into a bruising slog.
Their trip to West Yorkshire comes barely 48 hours after hosting Finnish minnows KuPS in the Europa Conference League. It’s no great surprise, then, that Glasner admitted he won’t field the same XI twice this week. Fatigue must be creeping in, but injuries are causing even more alarm. On Sunday, Japanese playmaker Daichi Kamada limped off midway through a 3-0 loss to Manchester City, clutching his hamstring before Will Hughes replaced him in the 67th minute. Glasner has already confirmed that Kamada will sit out at Leeds, depriving Palace of his inventive spark.
The injury list doesn’t end there. Full-back Daniel Muñoz is still sidelined after knee surgery, halting the marauding runs that have become a familiar sight down Palace’s right flank. Winger Ismaïla Sarr returned from an ankle knock at the Etihad but has since jetted off to join Senegal for the Africa Cup of Nations, leaving another void in Glasner’s attacking options. Jean-Philippe Mateta, Palace’s top scorer, is being carefully managed too, his minutes strictly rationed to stave off fatigue and fresh knocks. “We’ve got to be smart with squad rotation,” Glasner sighed. “We simply can’t overrun players, especially with this schedule.”

On the opposite touchline, Leeds boss Daniel Farke was characteristically tight-lipped in his pre-match press conference on Thursday afternoon. Rather than dwell on Palace’s woes, he focused on his own squad’s form and availability. Dominic Calvert-Lewin, rekindling the pre-injury touch that made him one of the Premier League’s most feared strikers, was the central topic of conversation. “It’s important he got game time,” Farke said. “He needed a few weeks to find belief in his body again, and since that moment he’s been rewarded. We all see the ball just falls for him right now.”
Farke resisted linking Calvert-Lewin’s momentum to an England recall—“I’m not here to advise Gareth Southgate or Thomas Tuchel; they know what they need,” he smiled, but was clear that the forward’s off-field leadership has been every bit as valuable. “He gives advice not just to other strikers but to defenders too. He’s stepped up as a senior figure without acting like he’s got all the answers. That humility matters.”
Beyond Calvert-Lewin, Farke confirmed that fellow forward Lukas Nmecha will miss out on Saturday, while Sean Longstaff and Dan James remain in Leeds’ injury treatment plan. James, who underwent surgery earlier in the season, won’t train with the group for another six weeks; Longstaff is back on the grass but will be assessed on a game-by-game basis. “We decide day by day,” said Farke. “But all other players are available for selection.”

When asked about alternative striking options, Farke highlighted Joel Piroe’s “world-class finishing” and insisted that, even as a newly promoted side, Leeds must “play to our strengths.” Piroe, he said, offers balance if Leeds need to dominate or chase a goal, whereas Calvert-Lewin provides the physical presence to unsettle any backline. “It’s good to be flexible,” Farke observed. “You don’t need eight strikers to have options; you need a tight, committed group who feel valued.”
On the looming January window, the German coach sounded a note of caution. “It’s a difficult market,” he warned. “Very few players are available who don’t come with an injury history, a lack of game time, or a huge price tag. In the summer, you have a full pre-season to bed new signings in. In January, you have to be ready to act fast if the right player becomes affordable and fits our group.”
As kick-off approaches, both managers will be weighing their limited resources against the momentum a win could bring. Palace must overcome fixture fatigue and an ever-lengthening injury list if they want to maintain their high-flying position. Leeds, meanwhile, will look to harness Calvert-Lewin’s rich vein of form and squeeze out the energy from the Elland Road faithful. In a fixture that often defies expectations, Saturday’s clash promises fresh twists for two clubs navigating the final hurdles of a congested calendar.

